Gaps in College Experience
What’s it like to be on a college campus these days as an African-American? Or as a first-gene...
“[C]olleges in America are just as segregated as the neighborhoods in which children grow up.”
A degree from a higher education institution is a necessary precondition to upward social mobility and secure socioeconomic status. Gaps fall across two main aspects: (1) access; and (2) success. Access comprises: (1) college-going knowledge, mindset, expectations, and support (influenced by culture and resources of family, peers, school staff); (2) academic credentials (standardized test scores, GPA); (3) choice of schools for application and acceptance; (4) costs. Success depends upon: (1) emotional, financial, and academic support; (2) course selection; (3) doing the work and learning, and then graduating within a reasonable amount of time and achieving career and economic success.
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What’s it like to be on a college campus these days as an African-American? Or as a first-gene...
By Addison Beer, Yale College Class of 2023, Summer 2020 Intern with SeeTheGaps. In the wake ...
Most high school students desire to attend college. Yet many first generation college attenders (1st Gen) and those from under-resourced schools or families have little familiarity with the college experience, even if they have successfully been the first in their family to reach for and successfully gain admission to college.
Much of the existing research related to increasing diversity in higher education involves affirmative action and Constitutional law. A growing network of student organizations and college student-focused inclusion and success programs are helping to bring attention to the needs of 1st Gen students, students of color, and students from lower-income households who bring with them very different life experiences and current needs than many of their peers.
Another field of research concerns access to and the effect of college by type (selectivity, public vs private) for social mobility (measured by earnings outcomes). Chetty-Friedman provide the most recent comprehensive analysis. [Chetty Friedman 2017] More research is needed into what factors correlate with access to high-mobility colleges, what aspects of a college make it high-mobility (selectivity, support, curriculum, per-student expenditures, demographic composition of student body, other factors), and what factors from each type of college correlate with later earnings success.
Even as the cost for high-achieving low-income students to attend elite private colleges has dropped dramatically over the years (due to use of Pell Grants and other financial aid support from the institution), why do more of such students attend their local elite, highly-selective public university than the elite private colleges?
Hierarchy of institutions [Barron’s Tiers of selectivity: 1 = “most competitive,” 2 = “highly competitive plus,” 3 = “highly competitive,” and 4 = “very competitive plus] — elite schools, state universities, community college and trade schools. Chetty Friedman found that college can indeed be a class equalizer, particularly for those who attend elite colleges. They classify colleges as Ivy-Plus, elite, highly selective, and selective.
Success and Retention — 1st Gen, hidden expenses, stigma, inability to travel home, micro-agressions,
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We are at the beginning edge of a burgeoning intersection area for genetics and social science. Some scientists take the view that in gene-environment research, it is not the environment that reflects genetic effects, but that due to “population stratification” these measured behavioral trait genes “may be acting as proxies for social environments.” “[G]enes shape not just behavior, but also the environment that contextualizes and constrains behavioral choices” citing Plomin & Bergeman (1991). Critics like Conley argue that many of the studied gene-environment relationships are more associational than causative or even correlative, and that it is impossible to study the effect of one gene in isolation due to the complexity of the gene-gene interactions in humans and the variety across the global population .
More studies need to be done to test correlations and effect size in other, larger, and more diverse sample groups. Genetics research is just starting to identify the polygenic components related to intelligence, only accounting for less than five percent of variations in measured intelligence. See [Skiekers et al., Genome-wide association meta-analysis]. Questions arise such as: What kinds of environmental factors translate to epigenetic markers that in turn affect academic and other kinds of measured achievement? How can the effects of positive genetic markers be enhanced for children born into lower privileged families? For children with lower polygenic scores, how can interventions help reduce cognitive and other differentials between them and children born with higher polygenic scores? What are the ethical implications of knowing whether a child has these genetic markers?
Why is it that “low-birth-weight black infants have a lower mortality rate than low-birth-weight white infants” even though the prevalence of low-birth rate infants is much higher for black mothers than it is for white mothers, even with similar education levels? What other factors are not being controlled for in studies that find gaps based on race? What is it about being black that contributes to higher infant mortality rates?
Many prenatal factors that effect how a child develops in the womb also can contribute to predisposition and ability to learn and read. Poverty and race have strong correlations with low birth-weight, which can lead to infant mortality or later cognitive developmental and health issues. Scientists are discovering that it no longer takes generations for humans to change based on environmental factors (pollution, type of food availability, etc.). They are finding that environmental effects, like the stress of living in extreme poverty and constant racism, can cause changes in the fundamental genetic composition of humans within a single generation. The study of these effects is called epigenetics.
Research is also developing to better understand the genetic correlates for intelligence, measured by test scores, academic attainment, and socioeconomic outcome.
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